This article was republished with permission from 海角精品黑料’s news partners at .聽Sign up for today.

This content was republished with permission from 海角精品黑料鈥檚 news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for聽听迟辞诲补测.
A historically Black cemetery encroached upon when the Capital Beltway was constructed in the 1960s is again in potential peril, a national preservation organization said on Thursday.
The Morningstar Tabernacle No. 88 Order of Moses Cemetery and Hall, in Montgomery County, was designated one of the nation鈥檚 鈥溾 by the Washington, D.C.-based National Trust for Historic Preservation.
The cemetery and hall were established around 1885 alongside a post-Emancipation Black settlement known as Gibson Grove, according to the trust.

鈥淩esidents, some of whom had been formerly enslaved, established a local benevolent society to care for the sick and destitute, bury the deceased, and provide overall support to the local Black community,鈥 they wrote.
鈥淚n an act of racial injustice, highway construction in the 1960s ran through the Gibson Grove community and took a portion of the cemetery site,鈥 they added.
The National Trust said that the Maryland Department of Transportation鈥檚 plan to widen I-495 鈥渇urther threatens the cemetery, where known burials span from 1894 to 1977.鈥
A link is provided on the National Trust for Historic Preservation鈥檚 website, where the announcement is posted, for people who want to 鈥渢ell the Maryland Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration to protect this historic African American cemetery.鈥
MDOT is well aware of the cemetery and of concerns that the highway-widening plan being pushed by Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R) will harm it.
In a letter released on Thursday, Jeffrey T. Folden, the top agency official in charge of the project, said the state has taken many steps to protect 鈥 and avoid encroaching upon 鈥 the site.

In January, he wrote, State Highway Administration crews 鈥渂egan removing invasive bamboo at the cemetery to facilitate the documentation of marked graves and the archaeological site of Moses Hall.鈥
鈥淥nce the invasive bamboo was removed, maintenance crews were called upon to stabilize the soil and divert stormwater by planting grass seed, laying appropriate soil matting, and straw bales,鈥 Folden added.
He said that a 鈥渞emote sensing survey鈥 will take place this summer to locate unmarked graves. 鈥淎ll of this work is being closely coordinated with the Friends of Moses Hall.鈥
The state has installed a metal gate to keep trespassers out, removed litter and will be adding plantings 鈥渨here appropriate.鈥
鈥淓xtensive coordination with leadership from the First Agape African American Methodist Episcopal Zion Church is also ongoing to address existing stormwater issues and identify appropriate mitigation for any potential impacts to the property,鈥 Folden wrote.
MDOT is working toward completion of a federally required environment impact statement on the controversial I-495/I-270 project and has chosen a consortium of international firms to handle design and other 鈥減re-development鈥 work.
Folden said that SHA has 鈥渃ontinued to refine the design of the high-occupancy toll lane improvements and successfully developed new design options that avoid ground disturbance within the cemetery boundary. The new design will be included as part of the Final Environmental Impact Statement.鈥
The Maryland Chapter of the Sierra Club applauded the National Trust鈥檚 decision to list the cemetery on its list of endangered historical sites.
鈥淭he over-120-year-old Morningstar cemetery and hall site has gone from being unmarked on Maryland Department of Transportation maps for the proposed I-495 & I-270 toll lane expansion project to inspiring community group,聽county, and congressional聽support and even聽state bills,鈥 the organization said in a statement.
鈥淎nd now it is being given national importance as one of America鈥檚 11 most endangered historic places.鈥
Two Montgomery County lawmakers 鈥 Sen. Susan Lee (D) and Del. Sara Love (D) 鈥 introduced legislation earlier this year to prohibit MDOT from using its eminent domain power 鈥渇or a highway project that encroaches on or adversely affects certain cultural and historic sites and properties鈥 without the approval of the General Assembly.
MDOT opposed the legislation on the grounds that it 鈥渃ontains insufficient definitions and property types that would affect the current processes in place for consideration of historical cemeteries, bridges, and structures.鈥
鈥淚n the bill, there is no legal definition for what constitutes an 鈥楢frican American Cemetery, Burial Ground, or Cultural Heritage Site,鈥欌 the agency added.
The measures died without a vote.
bruce@marylandmatters.org